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A35583 Movnt Pisgah, or, A prospect of heaven being an exposition on the fourth chapter of the first epistle of St. Paul to the Thessalonians, from the 13th verse, to the end of the chapter, divided into three parts / by Tho. Case ... Case, Thomas, 1598-1682. 1670 (1670) Wing C837; ESTC R10699 286,764 418

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hated them because they were not of the world even as I was not of the world O Righteous Father for these I opened my mouth and for these I opened my sides and my heart for those was I mocked and scourged and blindfolded and buffetted and Crucified for these I wept and sweatt bled and died Father I will that they whom thou hast given me may be with me where I am that they may behold my glory which thou hast given me for thou hast loved me before the Foundation of the world c. Then shall the Father rise from his Throne and say unto them Come near unto me my Sons and my Daughters that I may kiss you See the smell of my Children is like the smell of a field which the Lord hath blessed Then shall he call for Crowns to put upon their heads bracelets upon their Arms Rings upon their fingers palms of Victory Scepters of Royalty into their hands appoint them their several Thrones the Mansions which their Lord went before to prepare for them upon which they shall be placed that they may sit and live reign with Christ their Heavenly Bridegroom for ever and ever everlasting joy shall be upon their heads all Tears shall be wiped from their eyes sorrow and mourning shall fice away And so shall they ever be MOVNT PISGAH OR THE THIRD PART OF THIS Model of Consolatory Arguments OVER THE Death of our Godly Relations I Come to the tenth and last word of comfort The Saints blessed cohabitation and fellowship with the Lord so shall we beever with the Lord. This consequent of Christ's coming is the perfection and crown of all the rest cohabitation and fellowship with the Lord together with the extent and duration of it Ever Now cohabitation containeth four glorious Priviledges viz. 1. Presence 2. Vision 3. Fruition 4. Conformity 1. 1 Priviledge The first Priviledge which cohabition implieth is presence The Saints after their triumphant reception by Christ into his glory shall ever be where he is The Scriptures abound with expressions of this nature appearing in Gods presence Psal 42.2 Col. 3.4 Luke 21. ●● Psalm 15.1 Rev. 3.21 and 1.5 6 John 17.24 and 14.3 standing before him abiding in his tabernacle dwelling in his holy hill yea dwelling in him and he in us sitting upon his throne and following of him where-ever he goes if at least that Scripture be to be underderstood of Heaven a glorious priviledge certainly for it is the purchase of Christ's blood the fruit of his prayer and one of the great ends of his coming in person at the end of the world that his Saints may be where he is dwell in his family be as near him as ●ationally they can desire 1 Kings 10.8 even stand before him and enjoy ●●terrupted cohabitation and fellowship with him If the Queen of Sheba accounted it the happiness of Solomon's Servants that they might stand continually before him and hear his wisdom how much rather may we proclaim them happy thrice happy whose feet may stand within the gates of the new Jerusalem for behold a greater than Solomon is here even he Psalm 16.11 of whom the Psalmist sings In thy presence is fulness of joy and at thy right hand are pleasures for evermore A second Priviledge is Vision 2 Priviledge Vision The Saints shall not only be where Christ is 〈◊〉 but they shall enjoy the beatifical viston they shall see and beh'ld that which the seeing and beholding of will make them blessed for ever Now there are six beatifical Objects in Heaven 1. The seat and mansions of blessed Souls 2. The glorified Saints 3. The elect Angels 4. The glorified body of the Lord Jesus 5. God in the Divine essence 6. All things in God The first vision which the Saints shall see 1 Vision the seat of the blessed John 14.2 2 C● 〈…〉 Luke ●● 4 2 Cor. 12.4 Rev. 2.7 is that which is called Sedes beatorum the seat or babitation of blessed souls the mansions of glory which our Lord hath purchased for his redeemed and which he went before to prepare for them the third Heavens the Palace of the great King A glorius place certainly for therefore it is called Paradise to set forth the beauty and pleasantness of the scituation that as the Paradise wherein God put man in his innocency was the beauty and delight of the whole neather world so Heaven the place which God hath prepared for man restored to perfection is the beauty and glory of all the upper Regions the top and perfection of the whole Creation Behold the outside of this stately Palace is very glorious beautified and adorned with all those bright and glittering Luminaries the Sun Moon and Stars what think you is the inside Consult that description which the Spirit of God hath made of it in the Revelations Chap. 21.18 19 20 21. the wall of jasper the City of pure gold the foundations of the wall of the City garnished with all manner of precious stones the twelve gates of twelve pearls every several gate of one entire pearl the street of the City of pure gold as it were transparent glass and you will surely say Heaven is a glorious place and yet behold this description of it is levelled to the low and childish capacity of our weak and fleshly senses as we judge of things in this imperfect state of mortality what think you then will the glory of the new Jerusalem appear when glorified sense shall be ●levated and raised up to a perfection sutable to its object Surely Heaven will as much exceed the description of it in glory as the bodies of the Saints in the Resurrection shall exceed in beauty these vile bodies of ours when they are resolved into dust and rottenness What shall I need say more Heaven is a place as beautiful and glorious as the wisdom and power of God could devise to make it that it might be the Royal Palace of his own Residence That august and magnificent fabrick which the proud Babylonian Tyrant stood tracking and boasting over Dan 4.30 Is not this great Babylon that I have built for the house of the Kingdom by the might of my power and for the honour of my Majesty was but a prison or hovel in comparison of this building of God 1 Cor. 5.1 that house not made with hands eternal in the heavens and those words are proper only for the mouth of God Is not this the new Jerusalem which I have built for the house of the Kingdom and for the glory of my Majesty What David spake of the Temple that little type of Heaven in decimo sexto The house that is for the Lord must be exceeding magnifical of fame and of glory c. must be infinitely more august and magnificent in the antitype this the glorified Saints shall behold and it will beyond conception be marvellous in their eyes Secondly a
felicity amongst sensual men who live no higher than the brate beasts of the earth meerly by sight and sence but when all is done the pardoned man is the blessed man yea he is blest and blest and blest again double and treble blessednesses are his portion for ever In like manner we may conceive our holy Apostle calling after sinners and even beseeching them not to loose themselves and their precious souls in the pursuit of a lye They that observe lying vanities forsake their own mercies Jonah 2.8 Here therefore he discovers to them who are blessed and what it is that will make them happy for ever only with this difference David's Maschil in the Psalm describes initial blessedness the holy Apostle here describes perfect and consummate blessedness David describes the blessedness of the way Paul sets forth to us the blessedness of the Country and state whither the Saints are travelling David speaketh of the blessedness which lieth in order and tendency to blessedness Saint Paul of ultimate and supreme blessedness the summum bonum the chief and most transcendent good which either the Creature is capable of or God can confer on it even immediate vision and fruition of himself to all eternity Ever with the Lord. Adam by that first candle which God lighted in his first creation clearly saw in what his summum bonum did confist and for a moment enjoyed it but the Angel who kepe not his first estate envying his happiness Ad solamen calomitat is suae incipit perditus pordere well remembring the method of his own apostacy tempts him by the same medium of pride to cast himself down from the pinnacle of happiness whereon he stood whereby himself fell down from heaven and the temptation unhappily took for while Adam was ambitious to be a sun he miserably put out his candle and so lost his way and himself too since which time none of his unhappy posterity could ever by the help of that snuff which remained find their way again to true happiness How miserably did the great Sophi●s of the world the Philosophers 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Rom. 21. In their ratiocinations those Secretaries of Nature the reputed Masters of Knowledge and Learning cum ratione insanire and in the Apostles language Grow vain in their imaginations and their foolish heart was darkened How did they weary themselves with the blind Sodomites to grope out the door which openeth to happiness but lost themselves instead of finding the truth Varro the learnedst of the Romans maketh report of no less than two hundred and eighty Opinions in his time concerning mans chiefest good Aul. Gol. each differing from the other and all from the truth as Basilis is reported to have asserted one hundred sixty five Heavens To this very day we see all the sons and daughters of Adam seeking for happiness but few or none finding what they seek for all agree in the notion but they differ in the object People generally go for happiness to the worlds Trinity Scil. The lust of the flesh 1 John 2.16 Scil. The lust of the eyes 1 John 2.16 Scil. The pride of life 1 John 2.16 But alas Nihil dat quòd non bob●● these have it not to give men would fain squeeze that out of the world which God never put into it As an evidence whereof it is highly observable that the wisdom of God who best knows the worth of things hath not in that Scripture 1 John 2.16 dignified these elements of the world with those innocent titles of their primitive institution pleasures riches honours but calls them by the odious names which the first apostacy and the habitual degeneracy of nature hath justly imposed the lust of the flesh instead of pleasures the lust of the eyes instead of riches and the pride of life instead of honours in which respect the Apostle denieth them their original from the Father and sends them to fetch their pedigree from a lower extraction nim from the world ver 16. And behold if these objects which contain in them the utmost latitude of all worldly excellency and that in their puris naturalibus were never ordained by the great and wise Creator for any higher service than of the inferiour part of man the sensitive part wherein he differs little from the beasts that porish now when by the malice of the Devil and the corruption of mans heart they are debauched and poysoned into so many snares and temptations how totally I say uncapable are they become of being an adequate blessedness for immortal souls Such of the sons and daughters of Adam as have had the candle of the Lord which was put out by the fall lighted anew by the Sun of Righteousness are mightily enabled by the irradiation of the Holy Ghost to discern the airiness and emptiness of all sublunary and elementary happiness and to make choice of more solid supercelestial excellencies for their summum bonum to sing with the sweet singer of Israel In thy presence is fulness of joy Psal 16. ●● and at thy right hand there are pleasunes for evermore Moses in the Old Testament and Paul in the New stand as two pillars of fire to light men the way to true blessedness Moses was courted by all the honours pleasures and treasures of Egypt to espouse them as his ultimate and supreme beatitudes but he shakes them off all as once Paul the Viper into the fire not less full of poyson than that venomous beast was Acts 28. ●4 First Pride of life the honour and grandeur of Phara●h's Court came to do him homage every one in the Kings Court for there he was brought up bowed the knee and saluted Moses by the Prince-like title of the Son of Pharaoh's Daughter which signified no less than Heir apparent to the Crown of Egypt Pharach having then no other Child but that only Daughter nor she but Moses whom she had adopted to be her Son from the Cradle of Bul rushes yet all this glory did Moses when he came to years able to make his own choice refuse by faith seeing what an hollow insignificant advancement this was i● was not the Egyptian Monarchy which could make Moses happy especially in the terms he must take it namely to turn Egyptian and forsake the society of Gods people no said Moses I 'le have none of it to suffer with Gods people here and to reign with God hereafter is a felicity infinitely to be preferr'd before all the Empires in the world This temptation failing next succeeded in the second place Pleasure called by the Apostle the lust of the flesh with her face painted her locks curled breasts naked and impudently sollicits Moses his embraces All the beauties of the Kings Court delicious fare ravishing musick beautiful gardens stately walks fruitful orchards pools of water princely sports and pastimes in a word all the delights of the sons of men the sensual fruitions of an